tirtlegrrl wrote:A (semi-related) question: How inaccurate can one's concept of God be and still have the real deity accept one's worship? Will all "true believers" necessarily march in theological lock-step with one another?
To answer that question you first must ask why would the real deity want to be worshipped in the first place?
If your answer is simply that He created us for that purpose or something like that, then the answer would be whatever unknowable thing strikes His fancy (whatever pleases him). But I think this is just the way the religious manipulators want it, because imagining that they speak for God, this translates as whatever strikes THEIR fancy and whatever pleases THEM.
My answer, however, which I think is made clear in the first chapter of Isaiha, is that He sees how this worship has the power to transform us from self destructive habits to that which enables us to grow and become more than we are. In that case, the answer to your question would be that the limits are defined by what inspires a positive transformation in us. To be more specific, worship is the ultimate form of looking up to someone and admiring them, and thus their qualities are the things that we ourselves aspire to when we worship Him. Thus the question is whether our concept of God conforms to what the real deity would have us aspire to.
Thus if our concept of God is one where He values love, creativity and giving to the point of self-sacrifice then I think most can see that these are indeed great things to aspire to. However if your concept of God is one who is obsessed with His own glory, power and control, who is easily angered and finds it difficult to forgive, who seeks to get His way with ultimate threats like a gunman or a rapist, and who sadistically resurrects people like suicides just so that He can torture them, well then I think most people would not think that these are great things to aspire to at all.